ew Westminster's 'mers in this third the series. awa Times Photo nen were Jim Higgs goals and two as- Clayton and Don n two goals and an Ross Jones with uA vaite, Barry Bolton D'Easum led the es each with two an assist. outshot New West- 29. Attendance last 1,598. g girl spectator who the New Westmin- last night and ver- " the western club, bucket of water in ym a New Westmin- at the end of the OSHAWA DAY :15 P.M. KING ANOS COURT THROWS STMIKES FROM , THROUGH HIS LEGS, VEN -- BLINDFOLDED! ~~ CAUSES ; , ---------- HE THROWS WITH 19 WINODUPS, 14 HAND: ELIVERIES, AND S SPEEDS H1S"FAST" BALL HAS eptds CLOCKED AT 104 MPH OFTBALL'S GREATEST PITC! NY APPEAANCE THis W yi. STADIUM bert a We aN HAWA TIMES nbers of the Oshawa of Game. Children 50¢, Srereecererenocneenn or gin * bowski to make people forget o ae ew ee 4 Lonberg's Repeat Job! Keeps Boston At Top By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Jim Lonborg, down about 20 pounds from his normal weight, says he's a little tired. New York Yankees, down about 20 games from their normal posi- tion, are not impressed. Lonborg, the ace Boston right-hander, threw his second three-hitter against the Yan- kees in nine days Thursday night, leading the Red Sox to a 3-1 victory. Minnesota, beating Baltimore 4-2, remained in first place in the American League, one percentage point over Bos- ton. The victories shattered the virtual four-way tie as Detroit and Chicago, idle Thursday, fel! half a game off the pace. Lonborg's victory over the 29. 3-1. In both cases, Lo Tresh spoiled the shutout. tory was in the books. my share down the stretch." In both cases, the score was org), gave up only three hits. In oth} The Twins hung into their cases, a home run by som precarious lead with two runs "T think I'm a little tired," Lonborg said when his 19th vic-| "It's been a long season for me. I started out weighing 215 and/ I'm down to about 195. But) Harmon Killebrew of the don't get me wrong. I'm not so fired that I can't contribute Yankees, now mired in ninth} The victory also was signifi- place 174 games off the pace) cant in that it was Lonborg's at a time when they're vsually|first complete game in Fenway running away with the flag,|Park since May 19. In 11 starts was all but a carbon co, y of|in Boston, Lonborg has finished the one in New York on Aug.ionly three games. He struck lout 10 batters along the route jthis time, raising his league- leading total to 210. jin the eighth inning. Tony Oliva \delivered a double that cracked la 2-2 tie and Bob Allison's sin- gle sent Oliva in. Dean Chance won his 18th game, stopping the Orioles on four hits. Twins hit home run No. 36 and the Birds, Reds' Rally In 6th Spoils Short"s Wedding Reception # isc toc By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The day was perfect for new- lywed Chris Short until Cincin- nati Reds crashed his wedding reception. Short, Philadelphia's 29-year- old southpaw ace, took a bride Thursday afternoon, then pitched five perfect innings against Cincinnati Thursday night. But Leo Cardenas' leadoff single in the sixth ended the | hitless string, Tommy Harper poked another single, Tommy Helms walked and Lee May smacked a bases-loaded triple, - yuining Short's evening and giv- ing the Reds a 3-1 victory over the Phillies. In other National League games, St. Louis clubbed New York Mets 9-2 behind Bob Gib- son, San Francisco nipped Houston 3-2 in 15 innings, Pitts- burgh downed Atlanta 4-2 and Chicago Cubs squeezed past Los Angeles 3-2 in 12 innings. May's triple gave Milt Pap- Red Kelly Coach Only GUELPH (CP)--Red Kelly, coach of Los Angeles Kings, said Thursday he has no inten- tion of playing in the National Hockey League this season. Kelly, 40, played 20 seasons in the NHL and was a member of Toronto Maple Leafs last season when they won the Stan- ley Cup. "Playing is a full time job and so is coaching, and with a new team I'll have enough problems coaching," Kelly said. The Kings, one of. six new expansion teams in the NHL, start workouts at Guelph Memorial Gardens Saturday. Players started arriving Wednesday for medical check- ups. Springfield Indians of the American Hockey League, pur- chased by King's owner, Jack Kent, Cooke, will train here also, ees ae haat a CHRIS SHORT e © » beaten on wedding day aera nati right-hander went on to post his 15th victory with ninth inning help from Ted Aber- nathy. Gibson, pitching for the first time since July 15, when a line drive by Roberto Clemente % on run-scoring singles by pitch- }pas a 3-0 lead and the Cincin-| epee cracked a bone in his right leg, | worked five innings and was 'credited with his 11th victory. but said after- ward the leg hadn't bothered him. Dal Maxvill paced the Cards' ")16-hit attack with three singles and a double while Roger Maris singled with The Pirates forged a 4-0 lead er Tommie Sisk and Maury {Wills in the fourth inning and a |two-run fifth keyed by doubles {by Clemente and Jerry May. | Sisk, 11-12, was tagged for jtwo runs in the seventh and | knocked out in the ninth before Juan Pizarro subdued the Braves. Randy Hundley poled a fifth inning homer, then singled in the 12th to snap a 2-2 tie with Los Angeles. By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS American League AB R H Pet. F. Rob'son, Balt 408 71 131 .321 Yastrz'ski, Bos 508 94 158 .311 Kaline, Det 384 79 116 .302 Scott, Bos 490 66 147 .300 Carew, Min Runs: Yastrzemski, 94; McAuliffe, Detroit, 86 Runs Batted In: Yastrzemski, MAJOR LEAGUE LEADERS 441 67 182 .299| Brock, St. Louis, 99 National League AB R H Pet. 498 91 174 .349 481 56 162 .337 424 65 142 .335 472 73 156 .331 Atlanta, 102; Clemente, Pgh Staub, Htn Gonzalez, Phi M, Alou, Pgh Runs: Aaron, Runs Batted In: Cepeda, 107; Wynn, Houston, 98 Hits: Brock, 178; Cepeda, 175 Doubles: Saub, 41; Cepéda, 34 102; Killebrew, Mi ita, 93 Hits: Yastrzemski, 158; Tovar, Minnesota, 155 Doubles: Tovar, 29; Campa- neris, Kansas City, 28 Triples: Blair, Baltimore, 12; Buford, Chicago, 8 Home Runs: Yastrzemski, 38; Killebrew, 36 Stolen Bases: Campaneris, /47; Buford, 28 Strikeouts: Lonborg, McDowell, Cleveland, 204 210; Triples: Williams, Chicago, 12; Pinson, Cincinnati, 11 Home Runs: Aaron, 35; Wynn, 32 Stolen Bases: Brock, 45; Wills, Pittsburgh, 27 Pitching: Hughes, St. Louis, 14-5, .737; Me Cormick, San Francisco, 19-7, .731. Strikeout Bunni Phila- Brooks Robinson hit his 20th for BASEBALL § By THE CANADIAN PRESS American League WL Pct. GBL Minnesota 79 61 546 -- Boston 80 62 563 -- Chicago 78 61 561 % Detroit 79 62..560 % California 72.67 J Washington 66 74 . Cleveland 65 76 .461 14% Baltimore 62 76 449 16 New York 62 79 .440 1714 Kansas City 57 82 .410 2114 Thursday's Results Minnesota 4 Baltimore 2 New York 1 Boston 3 Only Games Scheduled. Saturday's Games Detroit at Chicago Kansas City at Cleveland California at Washington Minnesota at Baltimore New York at Boston N COREBOARD National League Ww St. Louis 88 53 - San Fran, 76 64 .543 11% Chicago 78 66 542 11% Cincinnatl 75 65. .536 12% Philadelphia 71-67 .514 15% Atlanta . 72, 68 514 15% Pittsburgh 70 71 .496 18 Los Angeles 63 75 .457 23% Houston 55 86 .300 33 New York 53 86 .381 34 Thursday's Results St. Louis 9 New York 2 Houston 2 San Francisco $ Cincinnati 3 Philadelphia 1 Atlanta 2 Pittsburgh 4 Chicago 3 Los Angeles 2 Saturday's Games Cincinnati at New York Atlanta at Philadelphia St. Louis at Pittsburgh Houston at Los Angeles Chicago at San Francisco By THE CANADIAN PRESS National Hockey League sweat starts pouring in earnest action Monday. : The Leafs are already having) the club. Braves Blast Richmond Braves and Toledo By THE CANADIAN Toledo| Mud Hens were two of the hot-| u ball season ended, but a playoff jseries between the two clubs |has been no contest. | | Jim Beauchamp rapped two| The Cards' ace was taggedjhomers, the second with the/siammed a solo homer in or eight hits before turning|bases loaded, as Richmond/second inning and a two-run| gover an 8-1 lead to reliever|blasted Toledo 10-1 Thursday| double in the seventh. | "Larry Jaster, \for a 2-0 lead in a best-of-five |Governor's Cup semi-final. Beauchamp followed a first-| Wings' Arruda Blanks Jets Mud Hens; the fourth inning as he posted his fourth victory of the season over the Jets. ARRUDA FANS TEN Arruda, 5-7 during the regu- lar season, walked six and| fanned 10. Bob Moose was the! losing pitcher. He was victim-| ized by Steve Demeter, who! the) The Richmond assault was| directed against starter and| loser Tom Timmerman, who! in their home Olympia. into Kitchener, Ont.,. Monday. The Rangers may have difficul- until Tuesday, EXPECT 77 The Red Wings expect 77 players at the initial workouts, led by perennial all-star Gordie Howe. Back for his 21st season with the club after scoring 65 points last year, Howe was among the league's top five scorers for the 18th consecutive year. Howe has been an all-star in 18 of his 21 years as a Red Wing. Sid Abel, general - manager - coach, has invited 40 profes- |inning single by Felix Millan|gave up eight hits and seve | sionals and a record $7 ama- with a homer. His second-in-| jning clout was preceded by sin-| : -- Julian Javier connected for) gles by Del Bates, Millan, Mike hits and fanned eight for the « homers, 1 Bob Schroder two out in the 15th inning at)/Rochester Red Wings receivedin a sudden-death playoff for San Francisco, took se¢cond/q prilliant one-hitter from Tom|the regular-season champion- when Ken Henderson was|Arruda in a 3-0 triumph over Ship. nicked by a pitch and scored/Columbus Jets. Arruda yielded| a ic: run on Jesus Alou's |, single to Cotton Clayton in + single. Lum and Tom Aaron. | In thee other playoff game,! LUCKY MISTAKE | WINS $6,666.25 TORONTO (CP) -- Art West of Toronto will never swear at another parimutuel clerk for giving him the wrong ticket. | At Wednesday's Woodbine racing, the clerk accidentally gave West, a former back- fielder with Toronto Argo- nauts of the Canadian Foot- ball League, a daily-double ticket for horses four and six. West had asked for four and seven. The mistake won $6,666.25 for West. He had been just about to toss away his five $5 tickets when he noticed the error. West collected $1,333.25 cents on each of his tickets. runs in 1 1-3 innings. Julio Navarro scattered five victory. Richmond defeated Rochester Wren Blair Has Lloyd Percival HALIBURTON, Ont. (CP) -- Minnesota North Stars have come up with something new as they prepare for their first sea- son in the National Hockey League. Instead of relying on the club trainer to get the team in play- teurs to the camp. ing shape as do most NHL clubs, the North Stars have hired Lloyd Percival, a physi- cal fitness expert to do the job. Minnesota officials say the Program the club will go through here before it moves to Kingston, Sept. 16, will be simi- lar to that used by Green Bay Packers in preparing for the National Football League sea- son. They are the first NHL team Charge Finley Unfair Labor KANSAS CITY (AP)--An to use euch a p Detai not made public. As a prelude to the program, players underwent complete physical examinations in Toron- to before coming here to start on-ice workouts today. rogram. ils of the program were PLAIN Or FILTER Tip CIGARETTES { REGULAR and KINGS , | But more important to Abel) their problems with four kev|is the calibre of amateur talent! players refusing to report until/the Wings have been able to contracts have been signed with attract this season. Newcomers jinclude three members of Ham- But no such reports have yet ilton Red Wings of the Ontario come from Boston Bruins, who|Hockey Association Junior A! pened their camp Thursday in/series last year -- Don Gies- London, Ont., or from Detroit) brecht, Red Wings, who open Saturday/ Speck. Another outstanding prospect! New York Rangers will move,is Hank Monteith, 21, who for| the last several years has stood| out in the Ontario-Quebec Inter- ty getting immediate ice time collegiate Athletic Association since a fall fair now is in the with University of Toronto arena and ice may not be ready Blucs. | Although Punch Imlach, man- |ager-coach of the Leafs, has| made no direct comment on the| |situation, he could be faced| with the start of a series of! unprecedent charge of unfair labor practices against Charles O. Finley, owner of Kansas City Athletics, was filed Thursday by the Major League Baseball Players Association. Richard Moss, lawyer for the delphia, 210; Jenkins, Chicago, 201. Green Bay Expects "Hot" Football Year in preseason convinced many | Baltimore, who can handwres- | NEW YORK (AP )---Green Bay will win the West. Who else? The Packers already have installed an electric heating system to warm the field for the Dec. 31 title game. The Packers convinced both the NFL and the AFL last sea- son when they added the Super Bowl to their triumphs in the National Football League. Green Bay's opponent on New Year's Eve probably will be Dallas, Before that game, they must dispose of Los Angeles Rams, who are the pick to take the Coastal Division of the West. | It looks like a big season for the snow boot and parka set. Green Bay winds up its regular season at home, Dec. 19. If they win the Central Division, as expected, they play the Coastal winner at Green Bay Saturday Dec. 23. If they win that they play the Eastern champs Dec. 31, once more at Green Bay. It may take a year or two for Donny Anderson and Jim Gra- about Paul Hornung and Jim Taylor, It may. The Gold Dust Twins are ready to cut loose after watching from the beinch most of last year. ZEKE CAN DO THE JOB When Bart Starr can't play, Zeke Bratkowski can do the job as Dallas Cowboys discovered in their Aug. 28 exhibition Texans that last year's game in the Cotton Bowl was no mis- take. Defence is the big item at Green Bay. Willie Davis, Henry Jordan and co., plus those three linebackers and a talented deep defence shut down tight when the enemy threatens. The runner-up. to Green Bay is a wide open scramble. Minnesota appears to have troubles at quarterback, now that Fran Takenton is gone. Quarterback Joe Kaap, obtained from the Vancouver Lions of the Canadian Football tle for a title without having to contend with Green Bay on a home-and-home basis. Atlanta is in the same division but} hardly rates as a contender) despite improvement. } John Unitas is the reason the) Colts are favored in most polls to beat out the Rams and 49ers. Los Angeles can take it all if! Tommy Mason and Dick Bass) stay healthy. Bass made it in every game last year. Mason, who wears 314 pounds of tape around his knees, has been a part timer at Minnesota for jation, filed the charge with the National Labor Rela- tions Board office here. The association accuses Finley of interfering with what it terms "the rights of players to take concerted action." He was accused specifically of trying to persuade individual players not to go through with a request for a grievance hear- ing before baseball commission- er William Eckert. The dispute leading to the hearing was touched off when Finley fined pitcher Lew Krausse for rowdyism on a flight from Boston to Kansas City Aug. $8. Manager Alvin} Dark was fired. | Krausse also was suspended | then later reinstated by Finley. | DEMETER ILL | DETROIT (AP)--Veteran | outfielder Don Demeter has a} SALES - SERVICE % e Repairs to All Mai disturbance in' his coronary | artery circulation and won't report to Detroit Tigers, the clubannounced Tuesday. Demeter was purchased from years. & SUP 39 PRINCE ST. Cleveland Indians last week. OSHAWA SHAVER SERVICE OSHAWA - PARTS - AGGES. ka PLIES 728-4284 League could help. Detroit appears to be strong, Whether Joe Schmidt finally settles on Karl Sweetan or Milt Plum, the No. 1 quarterback will have fine targets in Pat Studstill, Gail Coghill and Bill Malinchak. ; The Lions' defence is getting old together but still can rise to the occasion. BEARS HAVE PROBLEMS Chicago has many problems, aggravated by _ retirements, injuries and trades. Jack Con- cannon's slow recovery from arm trouble has left the quar- terback job unsettled. The one big plus is Gale Sayers, the best game-breaker in pro foot- ball. The new divisional setup should prove a boom to Los game. The Pack's 20-3 victory Angeles, San Francisco and has 3 YEARS | CROSS CANADA PAVING GUARANTEE also 6- 12- 18-20-36 month to pay hs After Completi Ne Pay For 2 M Call 728-92 @ FREE ESTIMATE... 92 Oshawa LARRY LLOYD TICKETS ON SALE Jim Bishop Sporting Goods Bolahood's Sportshaven Auditorium Box Office Open Sunday 1 to 5 p.m. --VS ee -- BOND and 7:00 ~ 7:30 « Returns After Game | Season Ticket Holders Must Pick Up Seats by 7:00 P.M, Game Night OS aiuais Salmonbellies Western Champions Sat, Sept. 9th - 8 pan. BUS SERVICE CANADIAN JUNIOR 'A' LACROSSE FINALS Oshawa Green Gaels Eastern Champions SIMCOE 8:00 P.M, Children 1.00 Under 14 Ticket Series No. 43 ADMISSION 2.00 - 1.50~+ 1.25 THE OSHAWA. TIMES, Friday, September 8, 1967 7 "z« Bruins And Red Wings Open Training Camps Among the outstanding play-jholdouts directly attributable to ers returning for another sea-|the newly-formed NHL Players' son are team captain Alex Del-| Association. this weekend as two more clubs} vecchio, in for the 17th time; join Toronto Maple Leafs injand Norm Ullman, the team's training and a fourth begins}top point-getter with 70 last B NEW PLAYER GROUP Bob Pulford, rian Conacher and Mike Wal- ton are the players and all are|-- refusing to attend camp until, as agreed with the association, the players and the club agree) on contracts, Tim Horton, REMEMBER WHEN? . « By THE CANADIAN PRESS Howie Morenz, the "Stratford Streak," returned to Montreal Canae diens 31 years ago today-- in 1936--~after playing hock ey with Chicago and New York for two years. The rest of his career was top form and the sports world was shocked to hear that Howie died March 8, 1937 in a Montreal hospital not long after breaking his leg. WHITE'S THE SECRET Letters in white envelopes iget priority in Chilean mails. Sandy Snow and Fred| Centennial Cup Final SOCCER LONDON "MARCONI" -- VS. -- OSHAWA ITALIA Kinsmen Stadium -- Sat., Sept. 9th YOUR CAR IS WORTH $300- (If It Runs And Has 1967 Licence Plates) ON ANY OF THESE SELECT USED CARS V8 Aut. PS. Radio. Lie. No. X14-886. 6 AUT. Lie. No, 519.608. *1780 SATURDAY ONLY! 60 DAY -- 3,000 MILE Mechanical Warranty Galaxie Hardtop V8 Aut. PS, PB, R No, K11-665, 6 Aut. Li adio. Lie, *1985 SEDAN (a No. 90-524 $1860 Seceeeeneeapensseee) TRENT AUTO SALES Lid. King St. E. - Bowmanville NOBODY UNDERSELLS TRENT RAMBLER -- SUNBEAM -- ROVER -- TRIUMPH BANK RATE FINANCING